Monday, August 31, 2009

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Sun Micro posts $147 mn loss

Sun Microsystems Inc recorded a $147 million loss while sales eroded 31 per cent in the April-June period, likely the server and software maker's last full quarter as an independent company.

In April Oracle Corp outbid IBM Corp and agreed to buy Sun in a $7.4 billion deal. It is scheduled to be completed this summer, and still needs approval from European antitrust regulators, which could come any day now.

The deal will give Oracle more control over development of the Java programming language, which Sun invented and is a key ingredient of the Internet. It also moves Redwood Shores-based Oracle, a business software maker, into the hardware market. Sun is one of the world's biggest sellers of computer servers, which power Web sites and corporate back offices.

Sun said after the market closed that it lost $147 million, or 20 cents per share, in the three months ended June 30, which is Sun's fiscal fourth quarter. That compares with a profit of $88 million, or 11 cents per share, in the year-ago period.

Excluding employee stock-based compensation and other expenses, Sun said its loss would have been 3 cents per share. Sales in the latest period fell to $2.63 billion from $3.78 billion last year.

Revenue from server sales fell 36 per cent over last year to $1.1 billion. Revenue from support services fell 15 per cent to $886 million.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected a loss of 19 cents per share and sales of $2.37 billion. For the full fiscal year, Sun lost $2.23 billion, versus a $403 million profit last year.

The latest results mean that Sun has lost $5.6 billion since 2002. It had only two profitable years -- 2007 and 2008 -- in that period.

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